WHY? "I made all this out of nothing. Trust me, I can take care of you." God
Amazing bit of writing from Theodore Cuyler, drawn from God’s Light on Dark Clouds.
I have noticed that the deaf often have an unusual quickness of
eyesight; the blind are often gifted with an increased capacity for
hearing; and sometimes when the eye is darkened and the ear is closed,
the sense of touch becomes so exquisite that we are able to converse
with the sufferer through that sense alone.
This law explains why God put so many of His people under a sharp
regimen of hardship and burden-bearing in order that they may be
sinewed into strength; why a Joseph must be shut into a prison in order
that he may be trained for a palace and for the premiership of the
kingdom. Outside of the Damascus Gate I saw the spot where Stephen was
stoned into a cruel death; but that martyr blood was not only the “seed
of the Church,” but the first germ of conviction in the heart of Saul
of Tarsus. This law explains the reason why God often sweeps away a
Christian’s possessions in order that he may become rich in faith, and
why He dashes many persons off the track of prosperity, where they were
running at fifty miles the hour, in order that their pride might be
crushed, and that they might seek the safer track of humility and holy
living. … God’s people are never so exalted as when they are brought
low, never so enriched as when they are emptied, never so advanced as
when they are set back by adversity, never so near the crown as when
under the cross. One of the sweetest enjoyments of heaven will be to
review our own
experiences under this law of compensations, and to
see how often affliction worked out for us the exceeding weight of
glory. There is a great want in all God’s people who have never had the
education of sharp trial. There are so many graces that can only be
pricked into us by the puncture of suffering, and so many lessons that
can only be learned through tears, that when God leaves a Christian
without any trials, He really leaves him to a terrible danger. His
heart, unplowed by discipline, will be very apt to run to the tares of
selfishness and worldliness and pride. In a musical instrument there are
some keys that must be touched in order to evoke its fullest melodies;
God is a wonderful organist, who knows just what heart-chord to
strike. In the Black Forest of Germany a baron built a castle with two
lofty towers. From one tower to the other he stretched several wires,
which in calm weather were motionless and silent. When the wind began
to blow, the wires began to play like an Eolian harp in the window. As
the wind rose into a fierce gale, the old baron sat in his castle and
heard his mighty hurricane-harp playing grandly over the battlements.
So, while the weather is calm and the skies clear, a great many of the
emotions of a Christian’s heart are silent. As soon as the wind of
adversity smites the chords, the heart begins to play; and when God
sends a hurricane of terrible trial you will hear strains of submission
and faith, and even of sublime confidence and holy exultation, which
could never have been heard in the calm hours of prosperity. Oh,
brethren, let the winds smite us, if they only make the spices flow;
let us not shrink from the deepest trial, if at midnight we can only
sing praises to God. If we want to know what clouds of affliction mean
and what they are sent for, we must not flee away from them in fright
with closed ears and bandaged eyes. Fleeing from the cloud is fleeing
from the Divine love that is behind the cloud."
Psalm 139 has a well-known description of God’s omnipresence:
Where shall I go from your Spirit?
Or where shall I flee from your presence?
If I ascend to heaven, you are there!
If I make my bed in Sheol, you are there!
If I take the wings of the morning
and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea,
even there your hand shall lead me,
and your right hand shall hold me. (Psalm 139:7-10 ESV)
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